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This is the kind of thing I had in mind at least from the hardware side. It's an HTPC, but the same principles of maximising the performance potential through compact space can be applied to a mid-tower or lanbox:https://www.steigerdynamics.com/prod...-features.aspx

What I wouldn't hav done - add a $1500 premium over the cost of the parts ... this is definitely targeted at the well heeled.

It's not a viable business model if you take away the "premium"/profit.

Rather than do everything by hand, I would partner up with someone in the industrial manufacturing field, so we can figure out a way to have as much as possible done on an automated assembly. That $1500 mostly goes into paying the technicians in charge of doing all the intricate cable management, water cooling setup and leak testing. If you think of it as a web project or graphic design project rather than a PC, it's actually quite cheap (I generally freelance at $200 per hour for CMS or php module development, some photographers I know charge $2500 for 8 hour photo shoots)
The ideal would be to keep the premium at below $200.

All that would do would offset the premium into the costs. You might be able to reduce it a bit because generally unskilled labourers don't realise how much skilled labour is worth, but they'd still have to be trained to assemble PCs which would demand training costs, and wage increases. Plus, you'd need a hardware manufacturer that manufactures everything you want to agree to do this.

All that would do would offset the premium into the costs. You might be able to reduce it a bit because generally unskilled labourers don't realise how much skilled labour is worth, but they'd still have to be trained to assemble PCs which would demand training costs, and wage increases. Plus, you'd need a hardware manufacturer that manufactures everything you want to agree to do this.

micky was assuming you chose the more cost-effective (in the short term) solution of "Assembly line with human workers"

Long-term, robots (a truly "automated" assembly line) are more cost effective if you are doing mass production. In the short term, it costs a lot of money to buy the robots and to program them accordingly (not to mention factory space).

There are stop-gap solutions that involve renting time from more generalized factories, but those cost money (and involve making sure the factory owners get their cut as well).

micky was assuming you chose the more cost-effective (in the short term) solution of "Assembly line with human workers"

Long-term, robots (a truly "automated" assembly line) are more cost effective if you are doing mass production. In the short term, it costs a lot of money to buy the robots and to program them accordingly (not to mention factory space).

There are stop-gap solutions that involve renting time from more generalized factories, but those cost money (and involve making sure the factory owners get their cut as well).

putting together a dell craptower wouldn't involve an expensive training program. Building something more complicated requires people with certain skills or a much better training at least, in addition to a lengthy and costly quality control process to make sure that the initial batches are up to scratch.

There's no easy solution but to me personally that's the only exciting part about setting up a PC brand - exceptional quality (more importantly: performance) with low margins sold at profit for the mass market. Anything else would just be too boring.

putting together a dell craptower wouldn't involve an expensive training program. Building something more complicated requires people with certain skills or a much better training at least, in addition to a lengthy and costly quality control process to make sure that the initial batches are up to scratch.

There's no easy solution but to me personally that's the only exciting part about setting up a PC brand - exceptional quality (more importantly: performance) with low margins sold at profit for the mass market. Anything else would just be too boring.

...

Okay then, your obsession is now considerably more expensive and even less marketable. Good job?

Steam: Gundato
PSN: Gundato
If you want me on either service, I suggest PMing me here first to let me know who you are.

This thread kinda went from "doesn't this already exist?" to "there's a reason this doesn't exist."

Well, I still disagree that you need particularly skilled labor to assemble even a "high performance" PC since it still boils down to "insert tab A into slot B". Mainly because the design and part selection would be done elsewhere.

But yeah. The problem is that such a product would be targeting "knowledgeable" customers (otherwise you just make a fairly good rig and market it as Alienware or whatever) who could assemble it themselves (or buy the parts and pay someone to assemble it). So you can't charge TOO much on top of it, and your profit margins drop drastically. And for 99%* of the world, they don't need this product. So you can't make up for it in bulk

*: I pulled that number out of my ass, but it is probably close.

Steam: Gundato
PSN: Gundato
If you want me on either service, I suggest PMing me here first to let me know who you are.

For Christmas, I got a new PC case and my mum took apart and reassembled my PC inside it.

And she 'aint no PC techy. If you are knowledgeable enough to know why you want a PC over a console, you're probably knowledgeable enough to find out how to build one. It's really not that hard or even time consuming.

Well, I still disagree that you need particularly skilled labor to assemble even a "high performance" PC since it still boils down to "insert tab A into slot B". Mainly because the design and part selection would be done elsewhere.

you sir, are BLIND :)

I don't mind the skepticism. Revolutionary products aren't exactly easy to grasp for the casual onlooker.

I don't mind the skepticism. Revolutionary products aren't exactly easy to grasp for the casual onlooker.

I've worked to assemble "super computers" before (at least, it counted as one five or six years ago :p). It all boils down to "tab A in slot B". All the difficult stuff is figured out LONG before you start assembling it (or an hour before you start fixing it :p)

From your picture, it looks like two video cards mounted on a mobo, a power supply in the upper right, and a few tubes encasing the cables. Nothing spectacular.

Seriously dude, you might want to research the topic. First you thought that an "automated assembly line" with robots was a good idea (it isn't due to the high costs). Now you think you need highly trained individuals to hook up a computer.

The only hard parts to building a computer:
1. Figuring out what parts to buy. This mostly just involves making sure you have a strong enough power supply and that your ram and processor are compatible with your mobo
2. Attaching the processor to the mother board. This is the single "hardest" part

Beyond that, all that is left is:
1. Hooking everything up, which is almost exclusively "insert tab A into slot B"
2. Move stuff out of the way to ensure proper airflow (or don't since the tolerances of most of the stuff you would be using are high enough that the cables shouldn't be an issue)
3. Making sure nothing is exposed so you don't short crap out (again, trivial since all the wires and connectors are insulated)

Steam: Gundato
PSN: Gundato
If you want me on either service, I suggest PMing me here first to let me know who you are.